Bangkok Post

Greeks feel dejected over new bailout

COMMUNIST GROUP CALLS FOR RALLIES

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ATHENS: The euphoria felt by many Greeks at telling Europe their country was rejecting austerity for good lasted less than five days.

On Friday, the population woke up to discover Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had promised creditors a new bailout package with austerity measures almost identical to those a majority of Greeks had voted against in Sunday’s referendum.

A cartoon in the Kathimerin­i newspaper summed up the swift change in the public mood: a group of Greeks joyously cheering with a “No” on Sunday next to a shot of the same group on Tuesday collective­ly gasping “Oh No!”.

With the government now ready to implement a package similar to one it had called a national vote to reject, 23-yearold speech therapy student Marios Rozis reckoned the situation had descended into farce.

“Everybody was happy on Sunday, it was a mature decision against austerity. Today I feel the referendum happened for no reason,” he said as he sipped a coffee and worked away at a laptop. “It doesn’t make sense.”

His reaction of bitterness mixed with resignatio­n and exhaustion reflects the souring public mood in Greece, where the jubilance of an overwhelmi­ng victory by the “No” camp on Sunday swiftly dissipated in the face of an expected economic collapse before fading altogether as the new bailout plan emerged.

Even before the crisis-driven concession­s were unveiled, fear had spread after Greek banks closed almost two weeks ago, freezing the economy and creating long queues at cash machines for withdrawal­s of a maximum of €60 (about 2,200 baht) a day, while pensioners without credit cards besieged bank entrances.

Under the threat of a eurozone exit, Greece’s government submitted the new package of tax and pension reforms to creditors late on Thursday in the hope of unlocking €53.5 billion in aid and the promise of potential debt relief.

Newspapers on Friday reacted with a similar sense of drama, with the Left-wing Efimerida ton Syntakton headlining its front page “Negotiatin­g in quicksand”, while the centre-right Eleftheros Typos newspaper went on the attack, estimating the “No” vote had raised the reforms bill by €4.5 billion in five days.

‘I voted ‘No’. And of course this new proposal doesn’t correspond to that ‘No’,” said Vassilis Sika, a 20-year-old unemployed Greek in Athens’ central square.

“I feel like a slave. They do what they want, and we can’t participat­e.”

The Communist-affiliated PAME group responded by calling for rallies across Greece on Friday evening, saying: “Everyone take to the streets! Battle now so that we can cancel the plans to bankrupt the people. We say no to a new barbaric bailout!”

However, with banks running out of cash and the spectre of economic collapse looming if no deal is reached, Mr Tsipras appears likely to win the support of a majority of deputies in parliament for the new plan, even though some in his Syriza party were critical. He now dominates the Greek political scene after a referendum in which more than 61% of Greeks backed him by taking his advice to reject the bailout terms. REUTERS

 ??  ?? CRUNCH TIME: New package comes with almost identical austerity measures.
CRUNCH TIME: New package comes with almost identical austerity measures.

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